Our Results
Tour the past two years of our activities since we opened our first pop-up restaurant in the Tenderloin in October 2019. Learn about our activities during the pandemic and the launching of our first course for prison residents at women-only prisons in California. Our focus on restoring dignity to people in need remains a constant.
Nourishing People Without Homes
2019: 650 Meals Served
- Opened our pop-up restaurant in the Tenderloin district of San Francisco in October
- Held monthly pop-up meals for people in need, curated by award-winning chefs with produce from our garden
2020: 4,832 meals served
- Offered 8 Love Tables to distressed local community members during COVID with a total of 1,000 baked goods
- Served 300 meals to health workers
- Served 500 meals to wildfire survivors
- Forged new relationships with local shelters in Sonoma and Mendocino County
Farms and restaurants
- Two wholly owned farms in Mendocino and Fort Bragg
- More than 20 partner farms, businesses and top local chefs support our meals by donating ingredients, labor and menu curation
2021: 2,211 meals served
- Expanded our activities from 100 to 200 meals per week
- Developed relationships with four shelters in the Sonoma County and Mendocino County area
- Launched our first garden partnership with a local shelter, sowing a new garden and conducting weekly garden trainings for their residents
Restoring Dignity to Prison Residents
2021: 192 men & women served
- Program launch in November 2020
- 156 women enrolled in our Art of Soulmaking correspondence course at a state facility in California with 40 additional on the waitlist
- 35 men and women enrolled in Art of Soulmaking course at the Mendocino County Jail
- $25,000 in donated yoga mats from Jade Yoga, Lululemon, Give Back Yoga Foundation and more
- A network of four facilities participating in our programs
- Prison Food Project launched at Mendocino County Jail
Get access to the monthly Rehumanization Magazine featuring contributors from the front lines of this effort—those living on Death Row, residents of the largest women’s prison in the world, renowned ecologists, the food insecure, and veteran correctional officers alike.